Rules & Regulations of the State of Tennessee
Title 0780 - Commerce and Insurance
Subtitle 0780-06 - Emergency Communications Board
Chapter 0780-06-02 - Dispatcher Training Regulations
Section 0780-06-02-.04 - MINIMUM COURSE OF STUDY REQUIREMENTS
Universal Citation: TN Comp Rules and Regs 0780-06-02-.04
Current through September 24, 2024
(1) The minimum course of study requirements for each emergency call taker or public safety dispatcher who receives an initial or transferred 911 call from the public in Tennessee shall include course work of:
(a) No
less than four (4) hours in the roles and responsibilities of 911 or public
safety dispatchers, including but not limited to the following subjects:
1. The mission, ethics, and values of
emergency communications providers;
2. Professionalism; telecommunicators as part
of a public safety team;
3. Basic
policies and procedures for telecommunicators and their
organizations;
4. Overview of
communities and agencies served;
5.
Rules and regulations governing emergency communications;
6. Service area geography;
7. Emergency communications disaster
plans;
8. Risk
management;
9. CPR;
10. News/media relations;
11. Responder safety.
(b) No less than two (2) hours in legal
concepts and principles, including but not limited to liability, applicable to
the operation of:
1. Law enforcement
agencies;
2. Fire/rescue
agencies;
3. Emergency medical
services ("EMS") agencies;
4.
Public safety communications agencies.
(c) No less than five (5) hours in
interpersonal communication skills, including but not limited to the following
areas:
1. Communication techniques and
information processing, such as listening, hearing, diction, empathy,
perception, and intuitiveness;
2.
Customer service, including but not limited to discrimination and harassment
issues;
3. Diversity issues
relating to effective emergency communications, including but not limited to
race, nationality, age, speech/hearing impairment, non-English speaking
callers, and demographics.
(d) No less than four (4) hours in emergency
communications technology, including but not limited to the following areas:
1. Operation of telephones, including but not
limited to wireline, portable, wireless (including cellular and personal
communication service ("PCS")), and text telephones for the speech/hearing
impaired;
2. Basic and Enhanced
911;
3. Automatic Location
Identification ("ALI") and Automatic Number Identification ("ANI");
4. Call tracing and records retrieval
procedures;
5. Computerized
mapping;
6. Logging
recorders;
7. Computer aided
dispatch ("CAD") systems;
8.
Wireless, Phase I and II;
9. Voice
Over Internet Protocol.
(e) No less than eleven (11) hours in
communication techniques and call processing, including but not limited to the
following areas:
1. Public
relations;
2. Call
receipt;
3. Interviewing;
4. Controlling the call;
5. Managing high risk/difficult calls,
including but not limited to domestic violence;
6. Managing differing call categories,
including law enforcement, fire/rescue, EMS, HAZMAT, or acts of
terrorism;
7. Managing differing
call types and events, including in-progress, just-occurred, late, events
requiring specific instructions, notifications;
8. The importance of obtaining proper
information, including location, nature, injuries, weapons, chemicals,
etc.;
9. Telematics;
10. Homeland Security issues, including but
not limited to:
(i) Protocols and procedures
(for example, call profiling, as in when to notify the FBI);
(ii) NIMS ("National Incident Management
System"), if applicable; and
(iii)
NORAD ("North American Aerospace Defense") call procedures and protocols
(dealing with emergency calls from aircraft).
(f) No less than twelve (12) hours in radio
communications and dispatch techniques, including but not limited to the
following areas:
1. Procedures and
protocols;
2. Radio
discipline;
3. Rules of the Federal
Communications Commission ("FCC") related to radios;
4. Radio coverage;
5. Consoles;
6. Responder safety.
(g) No less than two (2) hours in stress
management, including but not limited to the following areas:
1. Causes;
2. Strategies for dealing with
stress;
3. Peer support;
4. Critical incident stress
debriefing.
(h) No less
than five (5) hours in 911 calls involving missing or exploited
children.
(2) Course work shall include practical exercises duplicating communication center practices in which the student performs the subject matter being taught.
(3) Course work shall include testing.
Authority: T.C.A. §§ 7-86-205 and 7-86-306(a)(1).
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Tennessee may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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